Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. Outdoors
  4. News

Florida man accused of cutting brakes on numerous electric scooters

Add as a preferred source on Google

Police in Florida have arrested a man on suspicion of vandalizing more than 140 electric scooters in his neighborhood.

The suspect, 59-year-old Randall Williams, was picked up by the police in Fort Lauderdale on Sunday after security camera footage appeared to show him cutting the brake lines on a number of scooters, all of them available for rent via various smartphone-based services.

Recommended Videos

Williams has since been charged with criminal mischief.

Following the vandalism of more than 140 electric scooters since April this year, police checked surveillance camera footage to try to catch the perpetrator.

A video (below) released by the Fort Lauderdale Police Department this week shows a man approaching two parked Lime scooters at night. He then spends about 20 seconds tampering with the rideables before walking off.

FLPD Arrests Man Who Tampered With Electric Scooters

“Further investigation revealed a total of 20 scooters were located nearby with severed brake lines,” the police said in its report. Some of the scooters were also found with stickers placed over the QR codes needed to activate a ride.

According to the BBC, Williams was found carrying two pairs of wire cutters and wearing one glove when he was apprehended. Local reports said the police currently have no clear idea why the suspect carried out the alleged acts of vandalism.

Scootersharing companies in the Fort Lauderdale area had already been made aware of the vandalism and have been removing damaged scooters from the streets to protect the safety of riders. The incident is also a reminder to those who use such services to always test the brakes at the start of a journey.

Mixed reception

Dockless scootersharing services operated by the likes of Lime, Bird, Spin, and Skip have been launching in numerous cities across the country — and beyond — over the last few years. While popular with those that use them, other city dwellers have long complained about the machines clogging up sidewalks, or of reckless riders posing a threat to safety.

The Fort Lauderdale episode is notable for the number of incidents linked to one suspect, but rentable scooters are being targeted by vandals across the nation. A recent report in the LA Times said many scooters are being damaged or destroyed “in disturbingly imaginative ways,” including being buried in sand or set on fire.

While the machines are helping many folks to speed across town more quickly and possibly ease traffic congestion through the decreased use of cars, their path to widespread acceptance is clearly a bumpy one.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
A new sodium battery posts wild four-minute charging numbers, but don’t expect it in an EV yet
The breakthrough could improve fast charging and battery life, but the study hasn’t demonstrated those results in a production-sized pack
EV Charger

A new sodium-metal battery has posted a charging number that makes today’s EVs look painfully slow. In laboratory testing, the cell operated at a 15C rate, equivalent to completing a charge or discharge in roughly four minutes.

That doesn’t mean researchers plugged in an electric car and watched it fill up before the driver finished buying coffee. The result came from a small experimental cell using a new quasi-solid electrolyte, while the larger pouch-cell prototype delivered far less dramatic performance.

Read more
The Apple Car may be dead, but it became the foundation of Apple Intelligence
A decade of work on a canceled car project reportedly laid the groundwork for Apple Intelligence.
Apple Intelligence in Apple Car

The Apple Car may have never left the garage, but it apparently gave birth to Apple's AI ambitions. According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, Apple's canceled autonomous vehicle project, one that consumed more than a decade of work and over $10 billion before being scrapped in 2024, ended up laying the technological foundation for Apple Intelligence. In a rather ironic twist, one of Apple's most expensive failures may also become one of its most important long-term investments.

The Apple Car forced Apple to think like an AI company

Read more
Volkswagen’s ID. Unyx 09 just leaked, and it’s the kind of EV I want to see in the US
VW's partnership with Xpeng is producing exactly what we hoped.
Bumper, Transportation, Vehicle

I've been watching Volkswagen's China lineup quietly get cooler for the past two years, but the ID. Unyx 09 might be the moment it finally gets exciting, not just for Chinese buyers, but for the rest of the world as well. 

Regulatory filings from China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, Batch 409, have exposed the full specs of the upcoming sedan ahead of its official launch later this year, and it looks nothing like any VW car I've seen before (via CarNewsChina).

Read more